Publication | Closed Access
‘Green’ leaching: recyclable and selective leaching of gold-bearing ore in an ionic liquid
153
Citations
8
References
2004
Year
Solvent ExtractionEngineeringLeachingGreen ChemistryChemistryMineral ProcessingEnvironmental ChemistryChemical EngineeringMineral-fluid InteractionAnalytical ChemistryIonic LiquidIon ExchangeGold-bearing OreExtractive MetallurgyGold ExtractionEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental MineralogyRecyclingSelective LeachingIonic Liquid Degradation
The recovery of gold and silver from ore in an ionic liquid is reported for the first time. The 1-butyl-3-methyl-imidazolium hydrogen sulfate ionic liquid (bmim+HSO4−) was employed, with iron(III) sulfate oxidant and thiourea added. Selective extraction of gold (≥85%) and silver (≥60%) from powdered ore (of dominantly chalcopyrite/pyrite/pyrrhotite/sphalerite mineralogy) was achieved at room temperature in 50 h, with other lower-value metals present in the ore (Cu, Zn, Pb, Fe) extracted to only low percentages. Gold extraction was similar to that achieved in aqueous H2SO4/thiourea/Fe2(SO4)3, and silver extraction was significantly better. Moreover, the ionic liquid can be recycled following selective stripping of gold and silver on activated charcoal, with reuse in at least four successive treatments leading to neither ionic liquid degradation nor any loss in extraction efficiency.
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